Showing posts with label america. Show all posts
Showing posts with label america. Show all posts

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Ich Bitte Um Entschuldigung Fuer Mein Land

Es ist gar nicht so, dass Murrkins Eurovision nicht moegen wuerden. Wir sind ziemlich (schliesslich? nein, ziemlich) Menschen.

Die sehr wenigen meiner Fellow-Murrkins die je von Eurovision gehoert haben glauben es sei ein Hersteller von Brillen.

Freut mich, dass ich ueber das Verhaeltnis ESC-USA aufklaeren koennte.

Sie (meine Fellow-Murrkins) haben erst vor 2 Jahren vom World Cup gehoert und sind davon noch ziemlich emotionell erschoepft in Sache Not-Murrka. Und gerade jetzt gibts ja auch alle dies Scheisse mit Trump und Sanders. Gebt ihnen Zeit.

Stellt Euch vor: So ein oller Esel, der vor einigen Monaten noch keiner politischen Partei angehoert hatte, will jetzt nicht nur die Nomination einer der beiden groessten Parteien zum US-Praesidenten, sondern behauptet noch darueber hinaus, dass wenn er das in das Amt nicht gewaehlt werde in November, wird dies bedeuten, es sei ihm glatt gestohlen worden. Er spinnt unaufhoerlich vor sich hin von grandioesen Vorhaben, wie er Murrka von vorne neu umherstellen wolle, mit keinem Hauch vom Glimmer von konkreten Plaenen, wie alles eigentlich umzusetzen waere, wuerde er doch Praesident, da sei Gott vor. Seine fanatischen Burschen hangen rum an jeder realen wir virtuellen Strassenecke und machen friedfertige Leute unaufhoerlich an.

Und Trump und seine Anhaenger sind um vieles noch schlimmer.

Europa, ich gratuliere um noch einen tollen Show. Nur weiter so. Murrka wird nicht immer nicht davon wissen koennen. Deutschland, ich drucke Euch die Daumen, Ihr habt ganz recht, Eur Maedel war (ist) fabelhaft, sie hat verloren aber doch auch gewonnen, von ihr hoert die Welt noch viel mehr.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Socialist Realism vs Sitcoms

Much has been made (in the US at least) of that strange Soviet-era artistic genre, Socialist Realism: paintings, sculptures, posters, films, novels and other art forms produced in a manner pleasing to the regime, purporting to portray daily life in the Socialist bloc realistically and, anyone could see, not doing so:



Only recently have similarities between Socialist Realism in the Soviet bloc and broadcast television in the US occurred to me. Why only recently, I wonder. The parallels are many, deep and obvious, especially when one considers the quintessential product of American TV, the sitcom. Like Socialist Realism, it panders to the regime, willingly submitting to ridiculous levels of governmental censorship, and purports to convey everyday reality, and conveys a patently artificial, government-approved dream-world instead. Even the allowed speech is artificial. Artificial obscene words are invented to replace the real ones.

And there is that American pinnacle of artificiality, the laugh track. Viewers can't even be trusted to decide for themselves what is and isn't funny, they must be prompted when it is appropriate to laugh. Thankfully, the laugh track is finally fading away, not appearing in all sitcoms anymore. (Because the Cold War is over?)

Much has also been made (in the US at least) with the troubles had in Communist countries by artists who eschewed the easier success promised by Socialist Realism and produced art which was more serious. As if serious, non-pandering artists have tended to have it easy in capitalist countries!

In his novel Jud Süß, based on the true story of an 18th-century Jewish financier who rose for a while to a position of great power as an adviser to the Duke of Württemberg, only to fall victim to an antisemitic campaign and be executed, Lion Feuchtwanger points out some of the similarities between Germans and Jews. He suggests that perhaps great similarity is a necessary pre-condition for great enmity. The German Duke has nightmares in which he and his Jewish adviser and another Jew hold hands and unwillingly execute a stiff and grotesque dance, inexorably bound together. The financier comes to believe, maybe it's true, maybe not, that his real father was a German nobleman. I wonder whether the US and Russia could ever have been such great enemies if they were not similar in many ways. Those parallels between Socialist Realism and the sitcom, that's just one small example, one symptom, of profound similarities between two huge, relatively new, often crude, extremely powerful nations, similarities which might be much more obvious to most people in Western Europe or Latin America than to most Americans or Russians.